An online journal published by Little Toller Books that offers writers and artists a dedicated space in which to explore and celebrate the landscapes we live in. Our contributors are encouraged to go forth and find distinctive visions that startle us, rural or urban, modern or prehistoric, industrial, post-industrial, fantastical, natural, political, however they come. But each must be meaningful, surprising, felt.

An online journal published by Little Toller Books that offers writers and artists a dedicated space in which to explore and celebrate the landscapes we live in. Our contributors are encouraged to go forth and find distinctive visions that startle us, rural or urban, modern or prehistoric, industrial, post-industrial, fantastical, natural, political, however they come. But each must be meaningful, surprising, felt.

JOHN SEYMOURwas an ecological pioneer who championed the cause of living simply. A prolific author and activist in the self-sufficiency movement, Seymour travelled widely in his youth in Africa, India and around the waterways of Britain. In the late 1950s he settled in Suffolk on a remote five-acre smallholding. His aim was to live as cheaply as possible and support his young family by living off the land. In 1963, the Seymours moved to a larger farm in Pembrokeshire, Wales, which gave them more scope to practise the ideas developed in Suffolk. It was here that Seymour wrote The Complete Bookof Self-Sufficiency, which made him famous. In 1981, he left Wales and moved to a smallholding in County Wexford, Ireland. At the end of his life he moved back to Pembrokeshire, where he died on the family farm.